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Auguste Comte and Early Positivism

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1 Auguste Comte and Early Positivism
Chapter 4

2 August Comte ( )

3 French After the Revolution
Intellectual Background of Positivism: Efforts in the rehabilitation of social order after the French Revolution There are two mainstreams: 1. Return to traditional society (political romanticists) 2. New values of modernity and dream of future of the scientific industrial society (positivists)

4 What is ‘Positivism”? Epistemological doctrine that true knowledge is only about fact. Nature and scope of knowledge The fact or the factual is an object that can be observed with our senses. Term ‘positive’ doesn’t mean good or useful It means ‘the factual’.

5 Comte: Social Environment
Social Upheaval Political Instability Democratic Oligarchy of middle-class elites Dictatorship of Napoleon ( ) Return to Bourbon monarchy Economic problems Religious turmoil

6 Comte: Social Environment
Religion & Politics Parents were Roman Catholics Power of Church decreasing Role in education Land confiscated

7 Comte: Goals for Sociology
1) Create order Spiritual order Social & political problems Diagnose & Cure like diseases Society’s basic unit=Family

8 Comte: Goals for Sociology
2) Discover natural laws 3) Replace Catholic Church as source of: Truth Understanding Order

9 Comte: Intellectual Roots
Saint-Simon Comte’s mentor Both had theory with 3 stages

10 Comte: Intellectual Roots
Benjamin Franklin “Secular code” of morality Based on scientific understanding of human nature

11 Comte’s Calendar To make human life more rational
1849, published 13 month calendar Positivist Calendar 13 months of 28 days each

12 Comte’s Calendar 1 extra day at end of year 1 extra day on leap years
Had no weekdays 1 extra day on leap years Year begins on Monday, Moses 1 Begins with 1789 as year 1 2014= year 226

13 Comte’s Calendar Names of the months: Best representatives of mankind
1.  Moses 2.  Homer 3.  Aristotle 4.  Archimedes 5.  Caesar 6.  St. Paul 7.  Charlemagne 8.  Dante 9.  Gutenburg 10. Shakespeare 11. Descartes 12. Frederick II (“The Great”, King of Prussia) 13. Bichat (Marie François Xavier Bichat a French anatomist & physiologist)

14 Positivist View of History
According to Comte the history of mankind develops in three stages: 1. Theological Stage 2. Metaphysical Stage 3. Positivist Stage

15 Comte: Ideas “Law of 3 Stages”
1. Theological Stage (Understanding based on) Will of Human-like: Gods Spirits Demons Ghosts

16 Early Theological Stage
Objects are alive & have human-like qualities Rocks Trees Weapons

17 Later Theological Stage
Monotheism One all-powerful god Explained everything

18 2) Metaphysical Stage (1300 to his time period)
Natural forces were not superhuman Abstract concepts like ‘cause’, ‘ether’ , ‘being’, ‘substance’ etc. No more God God was an abstract entity. Social organization = laws-oriented society

19 2) Metaphysical Stage (cont.)
Transition Upheaval & chaos Feudal institutions destroyed Make way for Positive Stage

20 3. Positivist Stage Man explains natural phenomena factually
Ex. Fall of an apple not caused by God or ‘primal cause’, but by ‘gravitation’. Humans can observe neither God nor primal cause. Only fact is observable. Social organization is industrial society

21 Invariable natural laws Sociological truths
3) Positivist Stage Invariable natural laws Sociological truths High Priests of Sociology Positive spirit Morality & duties regulate society

22 3) Positivist Stage Private economic activities
No government intervention Restrict pretensions of wealthy Silences the poor

23 Positivist Stage Social inequality= “just” Based on individual abilities Shared truth

24 Societal Stages Societies go through these stages as well: Theological
Metaphysical Positive

25 Theological Stage Ancient World: Dominated by military men
Basic societal unit is family

26 Metaphysical Stage Middle Ages: Under authority of churchmen and lawyers The state rises to social prominence

27 Positive Stage Modern Age: Governed by industrial administrators and scientific moral guides. Whole human race becomes main social unit.

28 Historical Comparison
“The historical comparison of the consecutive states of humanity is not only the chief scientific device ... it constitutes the substratum of the science... Sociology is nothing if not informed by a sense of historical evolution”

29 TR 9/16 Historical Comparison
Comte: Different parts of the world were at different stages of development. Comparing these different social systems enables better understanding of social order and social change

30 Scientific Stages Each science based on prior development science preceding it Each is more complex than the last Social sciences are most complex and Highest in the hierarchy Sociology completes positive method. All others are preparatory to it

31 The Hierarchy of Sciences
According to Comte, mathematics is fundamental to all sciences. Mathematics is basis of modern astronomy Mathematics and astronomy are the basis of modern physics. These three sciences are the basis of the chemistry and biology. The complete and last science is sociology that assumes the other five sciences.

32 Comte’s Terms First named new science “social physics”
Later changed this to “sociology” From the Greek “soci” which means “society” and Latin “ology” which means “study of”

33 Comte’s Terms Social Realism= Society is real “Social organism”
Social Statics= Stability Social Dynamics= Change Social Realism= Society is real “Social organism”

34 Comte: Human Nature Humans incapable of self-control Need social (societal) control

35 Comte: Women’s Role in Society
Intellectually inferior to men Emotionally superior (e.g., altruism) Model altruism for children & men Make society harmonious

36 Comte: Relevance to Sociology
1. Coined term “Sociology” 2. Applied sociology (improve society) 3. Social statics & Social dynamics 4. Emphasized positivism Science creates truth

37 Functionalism Comte one of the first functionalists
Stressed consequences that social phenomena have on entire social system And interconnectedness of parts of the system

38 Functionalism Always be a “spontaneous harmony” between parts and whole social system Political institutions and social manners Manners and ideas Society must be connected with the development of humanity  


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